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The Chronicle Herald

The Chronicle Herald
Heraldhead.png
Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner(s) SaltWire Network
Founded 1874
Headquarters 2717 Joseph Howe Drive
Halifax, Nova Scotia
B3J 2T4
Circulation 70,000 weekdays
72,000 Saturdays (September 2014)
ISSN 0839-4008
Website www.thechronicleherald.ca
Free online archives thechronicleherald.ca/archives (August 16, 1999 - present)

The Chronicle Herald is a broadsheet newspaper published in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada owned by Sarah Dennis of Halifax. The largest newspaper company in Nova Scotia and the largest independently owned newspaper company in Canada, The Chronicle Herald was also the highest circulation newspaper in the Atlantic provinces until recently.

The newspaper has lost ground to online competitors as well as the free daily Metro Halifax, which recently became the most-read newspaper in Halifax according to 2015–2016 readership figures.

The newspaper's newsroom staff have been locked out of work since January 2016. Herald management have continued to publish using strikebreaker labour, and have been accused by the union of refusing to bargain in good faith with the intention of union busting.

Founded in 1874 as The Morning Herald, the paper quickly became one of Halifax's main newspapers. The same company also owned the Evening Mail, which was published in the afternoon. Its main competitors were the Chronicle in the morning, and the Star in the afternoon. By 1949 the papers had merged to become The Chronicle-Herald and Mail-Star respectively.

Graham W. Dennis took over as publisher of the newspaper in 1954, at age 26, after the death of his father, senator William Henry Dennis, who in turn had succeeded senator William Dennis in running the paper. He led the newspaper for the next half century. Dennis was proud of the paper's independence and rebuffed numerous offers to buy it. He was known as a humanistic employer interested in the welfare of his employees, stating that his proudest moment was the introduction of a pension plan for Herald staff. He had a reputation as an "old-school media baron" who set up bureaus across Canada and even one in London, England. Dennis considered the paper essential to effecting positive change in Nova Scotia and ensured that it was available across the province.

In 1998 the company began producing a Sunday edition called The Sunday Herald, which ran until April 20, 2013. In 2004 The Chronicle-Herald and Mail-Star were merged to form the single The Chronicle Herald. In January 2004, The Chronicle Herald became the first newspaper in Canada, and one of only several in the world, to operate a WIFAG offset press. This development led to an increased use of colour, and changes in font and styling.


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